by JameisLoseston » Mon Nov 29, 2021 12:17 pm
Project update! Red Dunn NPR raws:
1924: 74.3
1925: 97.75
1926: 74.07
1927: 66.78
1928: 63.07
1929: 69.13
1930: 133.5
1931: 141.68 (non-qualifying)
Career: 89.7
I honestly expected him to fare a bit better than this; I'd have predicted something closer to 100 than 90. It seems that simply adding Friedman back into the league data pool caused some problems for Dunn; Friedman alone impacted the league ratios very noticeably. His 1930 still makes it as the 4th-highest rated season ever, and 1931 obviously is non-qualifying on only 31 attempts, but it'd have been higher than Friedman '29 if not for the stipulation that the passer rating variables cap at 2.375, because his TD rate was astronomical.
1924 was inherently problematic due to the severe statistical underrecording of that year, and I don't know what to make of the result. It seems to me that Dunn had a very solid rookie season, and he's in my top 3 MVP picks for that year. But the underreporting of stats that would negatively affect the league ratios, combined with random JAGs like Hoge Workman putting up numbers out of nowhere, combined to hold Dunn's efficiency output unexpectedly close to the league average. I'm not sure to what degree we can assume that the underrecording applies equally to Dunn, but if his stats are more complete than everyone else's, then he could have been better than shown here. He is my 1925 MVP, and his NPR of almost 100 on a (disputed) title team provides solid evidence for that selection.
i knew his middle seasons wouldn't fare too well, but somewhat surprisingly, he always managed to hang right around league average even in his off years. Interestingly, his highest volume season (1928) was his lowest rated. Overall, despite a slightly underwhelming result, Dunn still comes in as the #6 all time passer on the NPR leader board, just ahead of Aaron Rodgers. Red Dunn, highest rated Packer QB? Well, I'm not sure anymore, because Rodgers' 2020 probably pushed him up the board a good bit himself, but as of 2018, he sure was!
Actually, we'll still have to see about that one, because he isn't the last player who'll be made a part of this project. A certain other Packer legend is up next! Since Dunn performed slightly below expectation, though, I'm predicting Herber to fall somewhere right around him or slightly lower, because league passing had improved by the latter part of his career. However, Herber also didn't have a Friedman who was head and shoulders better than him to muck things up, so we'll see how it goes. In any case, this exercise has pretty much established that Friedman was an unbelievable player, whereas Dunn was merely a very good one. Very good... that's a perfect characterization! These calculations surely ought to bolster his candidacy for that Hall, and I will no doubt spend a part of the article advocating for his induction.